 Hey guys, what's going on? It's Andy Elliott. Welcome to the 1%er podcast. All right, so you guys know I'm like ultra-frequent when it comes to health, right? Like total immersion on like me trying to live as long as I possibly can. Selfishly, I want to live a long time. I also want to live a long time for my family and my kids, my team. I want to be around for you guys. It's a beautiful time to be alive. There's this thing that Steve has. It's called Advanced Longevity. He has a company that literally can scan you and tell you if there's anything down the road in your future that could be the death of you. It's like looking down the shotgun like a barrel and truly seeing any problems you have in the future. Any organ in your body from cancer or anything. And I want to tell you something. I did one of these scans. It is mind-blowing what you will find out, what you can see. And I'm going to tell you this is going to be one of the most educational podcasts ever. I guarantee he's going to give you information you didn't even know existed and also tell you how if you want to scan and see if there's anything in the future for you, good or bad, you guys can see it. So cool. So check this out. Be ready to get educated if you care about health, which obviously we have to stay alive. This is going to be something you want to watch the entire video. Check it out. All right, guys. So I'm here today with Steve. Steve is going to educate us. So I asked Steve. I said, Steve, do me a favor. I said, tell me why a lot of people haven't heard about this technology in which they can scan you and you can figure out what's down the road for you. What does your future look like? Like, do I have a blocked heart? Do I have heart disease? Do I have something that's going on which Steve can really explain to us in my prostate? You know, do I have something that maybe will be an issue four years from now, but I don't have any symptoms today? And Steve goes, yeah, well, most of the time doctors will turn you away unless you're sick. And I thought, man, well, why don't people know about this? And he said, well, because a lot of people wouldn't get paid if everybody knew about this. So guys, I want to tell you, I'm going to introduce you to Steve. He has advanced body scan company, but then they went into advanced longevity, which is truly how to live out a long life, which means to find out if there is anything, how to fix it, how to catch it early and how to stay healthy, which is longevity. So Steve, you don't need an introduction, but I'm just going to tell you like, truly you saved millions of people's lives. I've read all your testimonies. And by the way, guys, there's a QR code that's going to be on the screen multiple times that Steve's talking. Okay. And in the bio below, there's going to be a link which you can click on. And Steve has locations in Oklahoma and Texas where people fly out all around the country to go get their body scan and checked out. So I just want to tell you guys, you can actually get a hold of him. You guys can do business with him. I do business with him. He's truly changed my life. My whole family does business with my team does business with him. I will tell you, if health is important to you, you need to know this, man. Steve, I'm going to turn it over to you. And I just want you to just unleash and let it go. It's great to be here. And I got to tell you, it's been a long time since I've been somewhere that I've seen such a team full of energy and positive thinking that I've seen here today. Thank you. It exudes your character. And it's very impressive. Everyone, there's no strangers. They all came up and hugged me and said hello. And I was trying to figure out what I'd done. And but yeah, it's a great place. You've done a great job here. And I'm happy to be here and thank you for that introduction. The energy around this place is incredible. So I probably won't sleep for two weeks, but it's all good. Amen. You keep us alive and we'll keep changing lives. But so for anybody watching this, tell us a little bit about what you do. You've spent your whole life to this, but I think there's a lot of available technology that isn't crazy expensive, that literally can allow you to live a long life. And I think see what's down the road. Well, there's two things you hit on one is, you know, unfortunately in the US. And when I say this, first of all, I'm not a doctor. These are my opinions. And my wife says I have a lot of them. So we're going to talk about a lot of different things here and what I've seen and been exposed to. But I'm not a medical doctor or medical doctor. The doctors work for you. We have a whole team of physicians, cardiologists, primary care radiologists, they're all on staff. They are all in our team. We have the entire infrastructure that we control. But the doctors, we have great doctors. Matter of fact, the US has the best doctors in the world. The best doctors come here to practice. And why is that? Because the education and the facilities that we have are second to none. Unfortunately, there's a barrier to healthcare in this country. And that barrier is one thing. It's the payers. Hey, guys, what's going on? It's Andy. A lot of you leave comments telling me that you need help. Do me a favor. I'm going to tell you the best way to get a hold of me. Shoot me a text message right now, 918-210-0254. 918-210-0254. I'll help you with whatever you need. I got your back for life. Let's get back to the video. The payers control the healthcare, not the doctors. Every doctor I meet, without exception, wants to be a doctor. They want to provide the care that's needed to the patient when the patient needs it. Unfortunately, because of the payer system that we have, and it's controlled by a very small group of companies, I won't name any names right now, but I may later, you can't get access to this. That's fine. I think just understanding it. Yeah, just getting access to that care is difficult. Let's face it. If you heard about one of these programs that we do and you wanted to go to try to get your doctor to provide it, if you get past the gatekeeper and you get inside to the mid-level or doc, whoever you may see that day, the first question they're going to ask you is, what's wrong? Why are you here today? Well, nothing. I just want to get this scanned or I want to get this procedure. What's the response? We treat sick people. Get out of here because they can't get it covered by your insurance. That's right. Anybody watching this, I was telling Steve, I was like, man, I'm really healthy. I look in the mirror, I look healthy. I'm like, I don't need a doctor. You're the picture of fitness, I'll just say. But then I have a good buddy of mine that he looked just like me. He was really healthy. I run with healthy people and he ended up dying. I'm like, why do you end up dying? Well, because they found out there was a problem. I'm like, well, it didn't look like there was a problem. That's where these scans come and play is that our goal is to pray that we're going to live a long life, to take care of ourselves as if we're going to live a long life. But the body has a lot of things going on. There's millions of patches, lots of things going on. At the end of the day, you don't always know when there's a problem. That's the reason how these scans can detect and tell us the future and let us know what's next. Can you get into that a little bit? When we first started this back in 2010, 2011, when we really started scanning patients, the medical community was not a fan of it. And again, like you say, if we found all these diseases at early stages, the outcome's better, it's easier, the treatment's easier. Can you talk to us about some prevention things that you find every day in scans? Sure. Some people come in, they get scanned, and you say, hey, man, you guys are gold. Get your ass out of here. And then some people come in, and what are you finding? Well, it's crazy. The statistics don't sound real. But we've done study after study. And of course, there's other people doing this today as well. 80% of the people, there's a Dr. Leroy Hood, who is one of the most intelligent people I've ever known, don't know him personally, but I've read a lot of his stuff. He has a book out right now called Scientific Medicine. It encapsulates better than anything I've read about this, where we're going with medicine in this country. But these diseases don't just happen overnight if you're a friend. Did he heart attack, I'm assuming? Yeah, it was about a two-year period. They found out that he had a block, a block, 80% blocked deal. And they said, man, you know, if, or I mean, about a two-month period, they said, had he been found earlier? Right. So did that calcium, it's typically calcium, a lesion, did that happen overnight? No. No, it takes years to develop sometimes many years. Same with cancer. The two deadliest diseases in our country in the world basically are heart disease and cancer. They kill more people than all other diseases combined. But none of them just, you don't wake up one day, I've got cancer and die. That's why they have stages, stage zero to four on cancer. If I find this cancer at stage zero, as opposed to stage three or four, what do you think is easier to treat? Oh, yeah. I mean, the outcome is almost always better. You know, there's certain cases that it doesn't prolong their life that if it's found early, but the key is getting care quicker, because we do have a great medical facility and system in this country. Yeah. If you get where it could be taken care of it, get past the payers. But early detection has proven to save lives. We scan, the studies of scans we've done, 80% of the people, and this is in Doctor Hood's book. That's why I brought up his name. 44 or older, 80% of the population has some sign of a deadly disease. Now it could be as simple as a small lesion or it could be a tumor, a cyst of some kind, 80% of our population. And I want to know what it is. Yeah, in my body. You do. And most people don't. That's the craziest thing. The thing that struck us the most when we first started is we would be an inventor, we'd be talking about what we do to a group and they'd be like, you know, we don't want to know. So you want to die a horrible death? I mean, why would you not want to know? Yeah, well, when you do find out down the road, if somebody was said, hey, would you have liked to know before it got to this point, would you have want to know about it? Everybody would have said, well, yeah. My mother died of a late stage cancer diagnosis and the treatment, the ensuing treatment and suffering that she went through, I guarantee you, you want to know. You want to know sooner because it was horrible. It was intolerable. And really, that's the motivation that pushed me to this point today. I knew the technologies out there. Why aren't we using this more prevalent? So we set a goal to scan a million people. That was our goal when we started. We're over 16% there now, realize the goal wasn't big enough. So, you know, talk to Guy Cardone, he said, you need to 10x that goal. So here we are at 10 million. So our goal is to scan 10 million people before we're done. And we're building the infrastructure to do that. So basically, anybody watching this right now, and I want to give you a number too, because there's a phone number, so you can write this down because you can you can either scan on the screen, you can click the link in the description box below, or you can call this number because I made sure I had his number because I know some people like to call. I'm going to put this up. It's 833-411-Scan, 833-411-Scan. And I want to tell you something. This this information, it could be not even new. It could be your mom. It could be your dad. It could be, you know, it could be anyone at any point in age, you know, our bodies go through a lot of stress, you know, a lot of people go through a lot of trauma, you know, cortisol, testosterone, like everybody, like all these things that happen, life goes on, you know, chemicals, people being exposed to certain things. We were talking about your father, you know, and then, you know, how this has saved his life. And he's still alive. And he's 89 years old today, still working, jamming and rock and rolling. And he probably wouldn't have lived past the 70s, you know, which is crazy. It's 20 more years, you know, being alive. I just want you to understand something, guys. This is no joke. You get one life. And anytime I find value, I'm a big person in self development. It's not always in making money. The game is who can live the longest. Okay, the game is who can be around with their family to protect them, you know, right? You know what I'm saying? Like, so this is important stuff to me. So anything that's important to me, I'd like to share with you guys. Can you tell me how it goes? How easy are these scans? So somebody, they click the link, they book an appointment, they get it set up, they fly out, you got Houston, Dallas, Oklahoma City, you know, the three big ports, which is our easy flights, they come in, these are done in one day. Yes. So there's, there's some more complexity to the longevity package than just the, okay, so there's different stuff that people can do. So before that, you know, what we're really offering here, we touched on it just briefly being a sick care system. When you get finished with this, we've got about 1.5, 1.4 gig of data, all about your body. Okay. Can we talk about that? Like, we will. What's that give you though? Now I've got data that I can give to the system and that gets that door open. I've got access to the system without having to be sick. Plus you're going to consult with our doctor. We do intense consultations about every finding so you understand what it means, especially your DNA. There's hundreds of markers, 150,000 different data points. So that means you're going to educate me on who I am, how my body operates. You will know more. Yeah. And by the way, when I leave, I'll know like my best road for my best odds to live my longest life. Absolutely. Plus you've got a baseline. And be the healthiest. So now you have a baseline. I love that. The scan that you had recently gave you a baseline to know. There was, remember the data, there was numbers in there that we talked about. Now you've got a baseline of all of your system. And the thing, again, Dr. Hood, I want to reference him a lot because he's kind of one of my idols here. You know, he talked about where this paradigm started shifting. He talks a lot about paradigms is that we went from the medical community looking at one singular area as a problem and to that the body is a system of systems. So just like in your house, if you have a plumbing system and one piece of it goes bad, you pretty much all of your plumbing systems down to you fix it. The same in the body. One piece doesn't just affect that piece. It's all interrelated. And so by getting all of this data, by getting your complex blood panels, getting your DNA, and we'll go through as many of these and all of this as you want, we now have blood cancer detection. And I'm kind of getting ahead of myself, but we started out doing the screenings, just the scans. Okay. And during this period of time, I realized that the biologics are really the key to this, but they hadn't advanced to the point where they were being brought to the market. Dr. Hood, I should have brought him here today. He was really the lead physician that drove this detection of the genome. He really was the guy that invented the technology and he was an administrative physician and he worked for several different universities and on staff and was the quintessential research guy. I mean, he knew more about how this worked. And so he helped, it took him about 20 years and $3 billion to create the technology that decoded our genome. The information in your genome tells you about your future. It is the pieces that show what you're susceptible to, what inherited genetic flaws you may have, and also gives you a really good picture of how long you're going to live by avoiding the problems that you're susceptible to by reading your genome. But that piece, when it first came out, when they first were able to decode the genome, and I don't remember the exact number, but it was a million dollars if you wanted to go do it. And then it came to $100,000 and then it came to $10,000. And today it's commercially available. One note of caution, if you see somebody offering to decode your genome for less than a thousand or $2,000, ask this one question. And that is, where is your lab located? Today, you can get your genome lab done for free in China. I would not want China knowing what my flaws were in my body. And that's prevalent today. So always make sure you have a reputable US lab. We have contracts with multiple labs all based in the US. And that's another point. We never disseminate your data to anyone else. We don't put it in any bureaus. We don't put it out on the internet. So I wanted to ask you that. So if somebody reaches out and they do their scan, and they learn all about their body, they understand exactly what they need to do. They consult with your physicians. Yeah, they're ready to roll now. I'm like, okay, got my plan. No, what's up? I'm going to fix this. I'm going to tighten up here. You know what I mean? I'm ready to live my best life. That never does that report? Is that what you're saying? Does that report over? So you mean do we give it to anyone? But yeah, does that go over? No, one. It is your report. It's in an encrypted spot in your portal on our website software. And then we do not allow anyone else access to that. And that is yours to keep. And we recommend you send it to your physician if you have a physician. Whatever you want to do with it. Yeah, whatever you want to do, but we don't disseminate it anywhere. So it's private and it's kept that way. So there's lots of places that, you know, public, it's really not public, but your health information is sent. Yeah, I've seen that. Yeah, insurance bureaus and so forth. Yeah. We don't send it out. We're not under their guidance because we don't take health insurance. We don't take government insurance. And so we this is a private personal. Remember, we're giving you access to that system by this data that you're getting. Yeah, but it's your data and it's kept that way. And so we were talking about like when you guys go to events now, people how they it's not about you guys just giving out information anymore and trying to convince people that this is something that this is good. When people hear the name of y'all's company, they they'll swarm your your booth will swarm your your convention place crying, telling you save their family's life. I get more hugs and Santa Claus. Yeah, so let's talk about that a little bit, right? Like when we started, I say we were trying to get the word out and trying to help, you know, people understand what the scan does. It looks for disease at early stages and why that's important. So there was a long education process couple of years at least today when we go to advance people come up all the time. Matter of fact, we have someone in the booth that just says it says hello and talks to him and takes down their information. We have ladies at the state fair that wear t shirts around unsolicited. They paid for them. So that says advanced body scan saved my life. And so, you know, there's a culture that we've created just by being able to save lives. I get up every day thinking, see how many lives we can say today. Yeah, so I want to say something. So number one, when I got my scan, I want you guys to know something. It just feels good to have certain need to know what's going on. I mean, you know, some people, I just want to say this, it may be like, oh, I don't, you know, I don't want to know. No, you want to know. He just you were just talking about your mom. And you know, you said, if you understood what she went through, you, you would want to know, you know, you, you don't want to get sick. You don't want to wait until something's too late. You got one life. And you know, it really doesn't matter your age, right? Like, I mean, at the end of the day, I mean, I'm 44, I did mine. 80% of the people 44 and older have some sign of this disease. Yeah. Yeah, my wife was 42. She just did hers. And you know, it was crazy as healthy as we are when we looked at it. We were like, dude, we got things we need to change, you know, and we were like, we were relieved. We're really happy that we know what we need to work on. And you're a healthy guy in your life as well. And I see I'm out in the public every day and I travel almost every day and you're not the norm. So there's a lot of people. Yeah. And we had things we need to fix, you know what I mean? And I'm thinking like, dude, like, by the way, this is a, I would say it's a good turning point for a lot of people to really just say, Hey, you know what, I'm gonna start taking health serious. You know, where do I start? I mean, your genetics are, you get half from mom and half from dad. So if there's family history, you've got a high probability that you've got it as well. Yeah. And, and, you know, expose your family to your parents, your grandparents. Yeah, this is, yeah, I'm glad you said that. This is a cheat code, you know, to really see what's going on. So anybody watching this, maybe, you know, you're like, and I'm just giving an example in your twenties and you're like, dude, I'm going to send this to my mom, you know, send this podcast over to your mom, your dad, your grandma, your grandpa, you know, send them this link, send them this YouTube video, let them watch it and really understand that man, like, it's so cool. Like it's physically a scan. And then, and then the longevity that you guys put together, you guys put together a rollout plan. Is that right? Correct. Yeah, and I love that. We have a program we'll talk about at the end here about what all we've got in the Elliott package that I'd like to talk about. Because you started, you started with just scan and letting people know, then you brought everything in house, you built the infrastructure. And now you guys take care of everything. I mean, every day someone would call and say, Hey, I just want to let you know, I start telling these stories, but we had a gal. Yeah, I like the story Western Oklahoma, a little town called Elk City, which was the heart of the, you know, gas production out there. And she had her husband has heart issues in their family, uncles and her dad, her husband's dad. And so she saw us at the fair and she said, I'm going to do this course, you know, us cave dwelling meeting men. He said, I don't need that. I don't want that. Well, she bought the little package we offered at the fair and they came in and I have this testimony. We'll probably, we'll put the links on so they can see these, some of these. And sure enough, they scan, we scan them both and her husband was reasonably well, but she had kidney cancer and had zero, no symptoms whatsoever. Saved her life. I mean, she, she's the biggest advocate we have about this. She's a school teacher and had no symptoms. You know, you know, that's just crazy, man. You know, and I want to tell anybody watching this, do it together as a family. You know, do it, do it, do it together as a family. When I, when I got mindset up, I remember I heard about this and I was like, dude, I'm going to do this. Like, here we go. And the first thing that I did is I immediately scheduled Jackie's appointment immediately because, you know, I need her. I need her for forever. She needs to be around way longer than me for sure. Well, and it's again, I don't want to beleaguered this, but I can tell you the guilt that I carry around from watching how my mother suffered from a late detection of cancer. It's something you never lose. And so it's motivation. Again, and every person that, that we have a positive outcome, we call it story of success. It helps a little bit every day with that. So I had another gentleman that's one of the best cardiologists in the nation. We refer when we have findings, we help people get into the system. Systems hard to get into, especially, especially a specialist, the cancer oncologist or a cardiologist. Typically you got to go through the primary care and then they got to make the referral. We bypass that. We have access to these guys because that's what we're doing is giving you access with this information. I had referred heart patients to this gentleman for a long, long time. Great guy, very smart, very intelligent, hands-on physician, cardiologist. And I had been after him about getting the scan for years. One day he finally came in and got the scan and sure enough, he had an issue. And we, when we find something certain organs are hard to, without contrast, they're hard to image, especially the prostate. We can tell if it's enlarged or if it's misshapen. Both of those are signs of disease. So he got the scan. We saw that. We did a follow-up scan with an MR with contrast. While he was there, came after clinic late one Friday afternoon. His wife was with him. They were going down to a little resort down by the Red River for the weekend. So he was in the MR. I saw her in the lobby. I said, hey, have you had a body scan? I don't think we've ever scanned you. No, I'm fine. She's sitting there reading Better Homes and Gardens. I coerced her. My text was still there. So we put her in the scanner. It only takes four or five minutes you ask. I'll go into that in detail. And she's back out in the lobby, just as he's getting done with his scan. So we all talk and talk about the results and what we'll get them soon. And I texted the radiologists. They were done. So they get in the car and they start driving south. About 20, 30 minutes, the radiologist calls me, Dr. Sparks, Anthony Sparks, board certified radiologist, great physician. He said, hey, I need his number. And I said, uh-oh. He said, yeah, I need to talk to him. I said, uh-oh. He said, but not only that, I need to talk to his wife too. So I gave him the cell phone number. He calls them. They're passing on, heading south. And he tells him what's going on. And they do a U-turn. Not only did he have, he was hot for cancer in his prostate. His wife had a right kidney full of cancer. And sitting there reading the magazine, again, with no perceptible symptom whatsoever. If she had him, she wasn't telling him that she had symptoms or talking to anyone about it. He called the surgeon on the way back. They took her to the hospital. They looked at her. The particular person wasn't there that day, but they admitted her Sunday morning and did the surgery. And he said she wouldn't live six weeks. That's how advanced it was. With no symptoms, it drives me crazy how the body compensates because it continuously compensates for these diseases so that it's not showing pain. It gets to a point someday it can't do it anymore. That's when the symptoms appear. And then you're at stage four or three or four or worse. That's crazy that you said that the body overcompensates so that you don't feel pain. It compensates. Your immune system is fighting, fighting, fighting. Yeah. Because sometimes, you know, like, like how many times have like, you've been like, I got a headache or something else is hurting, backache, neck, you know, especially as you get older, right? Like something's always hurting. And you eventually just, you say this like, dude, I'm just getting older. And then what happens is that's just the way it works. And then, you know, stomach hurts, head hurts. Like you're just like, dude was, you know, was going to grind. Unfortunately, with heart, you know, what's the first sign of a heart attack? I don't know. Shoulder hurting? Heart attack. Oh, heart attack. Shoulders hurting. You're having a heart attack. And unfortunately, even with our technology today, over half are still fatal. You know, there's no check engine like they're on that heart. Number one killer of all diseases. So it's, and it's simple. We talked about what's the scan like. This scan takes less than five minutes. Come in dressed as you are. There's no needles, no dyes. You're going to put your hands above your head. You're going to go in and out of a big donut, not a tube. It's very narrow. Yeah, these things are, you never stop. Yeah, they're massive. I mean, there's no claustrophobic. Yeah, you're in and out. You hold your breath a couple of times and you're done. And it's that fast. We're going to scan from your thyroid to your groin and look at all your major organs, all your digestive system. We're looking for telltale signs, the smallest signs of disease. Can you talk about these machines? How like, how high powered they are? How, advancement in the technology in the last 12 years. I mean, especially your machines, you're like your machines are like the best machines ever. I mean, we've got machines ordered that will be delivered soon that comparative to today where we scan thyroid to growing. Now we also do brain MRIs with AI over read, but the new machines will scan head to toe in 10 seconds, 30 seconds, because there's some wiggle time in there in the beginning. Have more detail than anything out there. Yeah. So the key is staying ahead of the technology. Yeah, so guys, make sure, and by the way, everybody like comment below, you're enjoying this video, you know, any questions you have. Obviously, it's, to me, it's just black and white. You know what I mean? If as soon as I heard about this, I'm a person that like, I'm a, I'm an early adopter, even though this isn't like early adoption, I just didn't know about it, right? So like any time that I find that I can get an edge, because I love having edges over people, I love having edges on my competition. I love learning new stuff. I love everything. So when I found out about this, I'm like, dude, why haven't I never had one of these? And then it made sense, you know, obviously, if it was everywhere, then people wouldn't be as sick. And then the healthcare system, like there's all kinds of stuff. And I'm like, okay, all right, time out. Where do I go? And then that's it. So if you guys loved one husband, wife, doesn't matter how old you are, you know, I mean, especially, I think, you know, I'm not sure if there's an age you recommend that people get stuff scanned, but at any age, you know, people in their 20s get cancer, people in their 30s get cancer, people in their 40s is a very simple scan. You know, Dallas is a beautiful place, book you a spot, go to Dallas, come into town, see these guys, but you can call this number to 833-411-Scan, Oklahoma City or Houston, you have three locations, am I right? And then they can let them know what location we're going to. So when you call the number, we have a coordinator that will set it up for you and help you with your arrangements, hotel, everything. Yeah, guys, this is a no brainer. And by the way, this is crazy, you know, so a lot of people are like, well, how much does it cost? And I'm sure there's different packages. But what does it cost when you find out and get a bad doctor's report to get healthy? It costs you your entire life. I know I know people that have spent millions and millions of dollars, every dollar they've ever worked on to try to get healthy again. You know, it's no joke. I don't I don't play around with health thinking you got one life, you know, if somebody said they'd give you $10 million, and but you couldn't wake up tomorrow, you wouldn't take it. That just means your health is worth more than money. So you guys need to make sure that if you're watching this, okay, your health is super important. I want to know what's going down. I want to know what's happening. I want to know my body better than anybody else. You know, I want to I want to really start a new health journey. And me and my wife, we did and we started it right after the scan. We were like, dude, we know where we're at. And I love that you said that there's a baseline, right? Like, you know, we're here. So the next time we get scanned, we know here. So which leaves me to the point, what's the most important scan? What is it? The next one. Oh, yeah, that's good. That's why we do this in a series. Yeah, because if you don't have findings, and you're maybe you're younger than 44, again, eight out of 10 chance, there's how many of us in this room, you know, eight out of 10 chance, it's a big percentage, big odds, either at some point. Yeah. And the main goal is when you find out, it's just the main deal. It's like, what's next? Like your goal is to keep people off a surgery table. Your goal is to keep people off of, you know, letting things prolong and get worse. You know, but like you said, your dad found out when he was 70 something, he had a problem with his heart. And we got open, we stuck him in the scanner. And that day found out he had a massive calcium buildup on one of his legs, like, listen, he lost his mom to cancer, he would have lost his father to a heart attack. But it would have been a heart attack, right? I mean, that's what would have happened, you know, from calcification. So I want everybody to think about this for a minute. You said the number one killers is a heart attack, right? Heart disease. Heart disease. And calcification, I mean, comes from stress, right? I mean, is that right? Like a lot of bad eating, bar mental stress and genetics. Okay, could be genetics, you know, how many how many how many people have really worked hard in their life that are watching this? How many people have grinded? You know, how many people have taken on a lot of stress? How many people have, you know, put their back against the wall and, you know, you just worked your butt off, man. And, you know, all that, all that. And I love it. Because, you know, it's like we're not losers, right? We work our butt off. But a lot of that comes at a price. You know what I'm saying? You work, you're a grinder. Our medical system today follows basic what they call a wellness program. It's basically 100, over 100 years old. You know, it's popping you on the knee and coughing, listening to your chest and checking your pulse. Basically, I mean, I'm being a little bit facetious. But it hasn't advanced. So the technology's there. That's what really drove me nuts about this when I realized. Yeah, it's 2024 by the time we're shooting this. I mean, that's crazy. What's out here? And so you can still get these pieces that we do. But you're going to spend, if you go, and there's a very fine hospital up here that has a program, at Mayo, right? Right, you know, 20 miles. You don't want to do that. You'd spend weeks there if you tried to get all that we're going to do in the day. Because of the protocols, and I'm not blaming the hospital, they're under protocol guidance from because they take government health insurance. And about 40% of their health care cost is mandated cost. So again, when I say it's controlled, it's not the doctors in the hospitals. They have to be open 365 days a year. There's no locks on the doors. Their ER has to be staffed for any type of problem, whether it's a pandemic or a mass casualty, 24 hours a day. And listen, docs aren't cheap, nor save those facilities. So costs are unbelievably high. But they also have this huge administrative problem. So to get all of this care in one place is very difficult. As a matter of fact, I don't know if it's so much impossible. Yeah, especially in one day. Well, that's why I grabbed you and had you fly up from Oklahoma City. Appreciate it. Yeah, guys, we're in Scottsdale. Yeah, we're in Scottsdale, Arizona. And I was just thinking I'm like, I'm like, dude, like, how many people right now, like, are planning, you know, for a big future, right? Let's just, let's just make sure that that happens. Like, that's it, like, let's just make sure that we're making good decisions. And dude, procrastination is the dude, I remember when I was younger, this is so crazy. But I was in my 30s, and I had a good buddy of mine, and he found this girl and she was she was gorgeous. And they fell in love together. They went and got married. And he came to work one day and he goes, dude, she's got stage three cancer. And I go, what? And this is crazy. But he said, yeah, you know, her right boob has kind of been hurting her over the last like six to eight months. But she didn't really say nothing. You know what I mean? Like, she didn't want to come she said something like twice. You know, I want everybody to think about this, like, like, how many times does like your husband or wife or boyfriend or girlfriend, you know, say something, you know, like, man, this is kind of bothering me, you know, my neck hurts or this happens or something's going on. You know, we just, we just, you know, it's like, okay, cool, like, we're going to be good. That's just yeah, like, we're immortal, but we're going to be good. And I remember though that she ended up dying. But this is crazy, dude, that you know, she was actually feeling so I just want to say this, like, to me, I wouldn't got scanned. I wasn't feeling anything. I wanted to know my wife wanted to know. And, and now I'm good. I feel good. I'm like, okay, cool. Hey, if there was something like I got it, but there were still some things that they showed us that I was like, okay, good, I'm glad you told me, because I like to play chess. I don't want to play checkers, like, there's a problem and then I react. Like, I want to know what it is. Now I know what it is. Now I'm like, okay, cool, man, I'm going to make sure that I stay good in that area and I treat that good. And I'm looking forward to my next scan, like he talked about. But how many people do you guys have a family member that has complained at one point time about something? And then we just been like, oh, it's probably nothing. And the crazy thing is, is that he said that she was feeling stuff and then it just went away. And then finally she went and got checked and find out she had the cancer. And I think what you said earlier is you said our body like learns how to deal with pain. Your immune system is compensating. Yeah, like, like, dude, like when you said that, I'm just thinking like, dude, how many times do you feel like a weird pain, you know, in one area? And then you may even feel it for a little bit, but you're like, hey, this is going to go away eventually. Well, it's not that it goes away. It's that your body gets used to understanding how to deal with that pain. And then it just it overcompensates. Like you said, it just in family, it pushes through. We had a push through method that came into Dallas, and was part of our comprehensive program that we're going to talk about here before we're done. And he came over, he was working with one of the guys that was with this group, a mastermind group, high level people. And he said, Hey, you know, I'm really intrigued by this. My I'm 32 years old. My uncle and my dad both died of heart attack one at 49, one at 50. And you think I have any problems. And I said, Well, we can sure find out. This kid's 32. I just saw him last weekend in Florida. He's 33 now. And we put him in the scanner. And at 32 years old, this kid has a major blockage in his, what we call the widow maker, the LAD. And he has zero symptoms. So, you know, it got me thinking, gosh, you know, did this take, did it take, did they have this at 32 his father and his uncle? Because again, the genetics are straight line down. And did it take this long for that to manifest? Or did he get it younger? You know, we don't know, because there's no studies that's been done, you know, on a large group of people like this. We've probably got the largest database there is on this particular thing. We've got tens of thousands in our database today, with results. And, and we, you know, that's where a lot of our percentages come from. But you can't tell he would not have known. We've got him immediately with our consult with our cardiologist. He's under cardiology care. He doesn't need intervention yet. But by watching it, he'll be able to live past 50 if he doesn't do something else stupid that kills you. That's what our, we always say, don't do anything stupid because the technology is advancing so fast, the chance of living to 100 and beyond is in our reach. Yeah, I was, I was, I was reading this book by Tony Robbins called Life Force. And it talks about all the stuff that's coming up. And it said, we're probably 10 to 12 years away from every year after about 10 or 12 years that we're alive. Escape velocity. Yeah, escape velocity. Yeah, I was reading that. And I was like, man, they're like, you know, people will be able to live as long as they want to live. You know, I mean, every year it gets just a little bit better. So, you know, with the advancement that's going on in another book, again, you should read, I'm not getting paid for this endorsement, but scientific medicine by Dr. Hood. Yeah, scientific medicine. Well, I'm going to read that. What he talks about, I listen to the audible, it's, it's a tough listen because there's a lot of jargon stuff in there. But, you know, he equates it to a fire, a forest fire. And he says, you know, you've got your towers in the forest with rangers and, and what are they doing up there? What are they looking for in the forest? They're looking for smoke. Well, his point is that there's smoke, there's already a fire somewhere. But if you find that at the ember stage, which is what we're doing when our scans, we're trying to find it at the earliest stage as an ember, which is easier to put out a forest fire or the embers, you know, and think of the infrastructure it takes to fight a forest fire. Hundreds, sometimes thousands of firemen, 747 is full of liquid flying over. I mean, it's the same with the late stage diagnosis. It takes a lot more detailed and very invasive care to, to care for it. Whereas the embers, I can kind of kick dirt on it and go on. But his point is, and I see it, I've followed it long enough to understand, he talks about, we go from a wellness stage to a disease stage. And his point is somewhere in there that triggers, and he wants to know why they've been studying this for a long time because of his work on the DNA side of things. We're moving rapidly to that point. And, and when, when you get inside of our program, we, our docs stay up to date with this, they study it continuously, they consult continuously with guys that are in this space. And they realized, which is another big part of what we do, we haven't talked about, is that your gut biome is one of the most important parts. So you have your genome, which we decode and see the markers, then you have your phenomes, which, which actually affect your DNA. And they change regularly. We do your DNA, you need to do it once, especially if you do it with a competent lab, we have, then we continuously monitor your genome to your blood. And that needs to be done a couple of times at least a year. And that's our program, you get involved, you get all this data. So, so we have what we call the 30 30 30 plan, the 30 first 30 days, we're going to diagnose, we're going to look for the things that could kill you right now. You know, heart disease, you have cancer, undiagnosed cancer, or other issues going on that you aren't aware of. That's the first thing we're going to do. We're going to take all that data. And it takes some of this stuff we send out for AI overreeds. It takes a few weeks to get that back. So within 30 days, you're going to get 80% of your data that day, because we're going to go over it with you with the radio. So when you come in, you do this package, 80% of the data, you'll get same day. You'll get most someone to go over it with you. Then we send others out to do these specialized AI overreeds. It's a service and they don't give you the software, so you have to send it to them, which is great. It's a great product. It's their model, works well. And then at the end of 30 days, we're going to get the rest of this data. And then you're going to have deep consults, you're going to already have had consults with our doctors with the team on the next next 30 day plan. So so it's 30 days, 30 months to extend your life, 30 years and beyond. And the monitoring goes on. And that's where the real magic happens. Once we know there's the threat detection is out of the way. Once we know we've managed whatever we found there, hopefully nothing, but typically we do, then we go into the longevity piece. And that's the continuous monitoring both remotely and there's, you know, we don't have one particular thing we use, you know, Apple Health and the rings. There, all those things are kind of in their infancy and they're being improved daily. So we kind of keep up with the latest things. And those things send constant monitoring back into servers that are monitored by our docs and their docs. And that's the key. And that's what Dr. Hood talks about finding it at that point where it transfers from wellness stage to disease stage is really the key for the future. So we'll get the threat out of the way. We make sure we're monitoring your, your hormone and all of your blood and all of your other findings. We do the scans annually. And that's the data you need to make sure we're ahead of any type of disease when it starts to come out at the earliest stage. It's so crazy, dude. And it works. And we've got countless stories of survival, which I love to talk about, by the way. Yeah, well, it's crazy, guys. I'm going to tell you, you know, this is stuff that I mean, I geek out on like fitness and health and how to, how to just be healthier. You know, I'm 44. And dude, nobody can predict the future, how long we're going to live deaths and uncontrollable, right? We're all going to die. I mean, it's, it's uncontrollable. Like, you know, you said you can get hit by a car. You know, something can happen. I mean, there's all kinds of things, but there are a lot of things that you can control there with your health side. And I think that the key is to stay engaged, get the information. Be aware. It's easily available now. It's there. And it's continuing to improve. The DNA genome itself has got all the data we need. It's your encyclopedia of your body, every cell, every genetic. But there's so much data there that it's going to take years for this data to be processed comparatively to all the samples they have and the known history of these people that's given their DNA had it had it decoded until we get one thing. And when you see this, when you hear this happens and it becomes available commercially, and that is quantum computing, right now it's probably estimated with every super computer we have just on the samples they have so far with DNA to take approximately 20 years to get all of the computations done so that we can take your DNA and say, oh, you're on 14 days from now you're going to have this, six years from now you're going to have this. If we get quantum computers running, this will take about two weeks. That's how fast they are. And I'm not a tech guy, but when we hear that happens, the evolution that's going to happen in health care and longevity is incomprehensible today. And we're pushing it every second trying to get it there. Well, you're you're 66, right? Correct. You've been doing this since your 30s. I've been around the health space. Yeah. I mean, like in the health space, right? So you've geeked out on this. It's close to you within your family when it's done for your own family. Absolutely. You know, it's obviously you've mastered this, you know what I mean? It's super important about mastering, but we'll stay up with it every day. Well, you do. And I mean, you geek out on this, on helping people, you know what I mean? And it's we're driven. Yeah. And it's our it's our purpose. You know, you wander around in your life a lot of times, especially when you're young. What's my purpose? Why am I here? I see these guys doing this. I see astronauts. You know, what am I here for? I figured it out. Unfortunately, you know, I lost a family member to finally see my spot. But it was it was around me the whole time. It was put in front of me multiple times. I just wasn't listening. But I'm telling you, I am today and we're here. And we've invested millions in the infrastructure and every day's a blessing. And because I get to meet guys like you, they're dialed in and people that we save their lives. Well, I know this one thing for sure. We have millions of people, you know, we get about 150 million views every 28 days on social media. And I know every one of these people want to live a long life. I don't even need to ask anybody. Yeah. Yeah. So so what what we need to do, let's so let's tell them number one, I told them they could call the 833-411 scan, right? Okay, they can click the link in the bio. They can scan the code to get together with you the QR code. Let's talk to them at the end as we're we're ending the call. What is it you want to tell them what what do they need to know? What can they do with you? Take, take control of your health care. Right now, you don't have control of your health care. Your health care is controlled by big corporations and doctors that want to treat you, but can't. So the information that we're going to give you will allow you to do that. So they can reach out just tell them you saw the podcast with Andy Elliott, or they can scan the code. So I've kind of put together a little program here, especially for you guys. We value priced it. We're just calling it the Elliott program. So they can reach out let them know that they want to be a part of the Elliott deal or the link in the scan code will take them straight to that. That's correct. I love that man. Well, I'm going to tell you number one, I know for sure that we just saved thousands of people's lives. I know that for sure. Number two, education is the key. It's the key and we learn a lot of stuff about a lot of different people. But self mastery is educating yourself on you, right? If you're going to if you're going to build a great life, you got to make sure that you have self awareness, right? Self mastery. Absolutely. Look at look at how many people you teach a day. Yeah, it's amazing the people I see. Again, I don't talk enough about the team that I've met here today and I've been here once before. But the education think how hard they work to get that. But hardly anyone does that for their body. Yeah, I was just about to say that like there's there's there's there's two there's two worlds. There's two secrets to this. There's the external world. We need to master that. You know, spend money to invest in certain things in our life and to have a good life externally. But then there's an internally, right? And the internal game, a lot of people spend things on external part, do things externally. People spend more maintaining maintaining their car than they do their body. Yeah, well, that's for sure. I know that. And I don't know why we don't think about it a lot. I still think it's talked about a lot. So I'm glad that we just had a real long conversation on this. Everybody is massively educated. Every single person that's watched it that made it to this point. I'm telling you, you know, I think that I run across certain people in my life, God puts in my way for me to say, Hey, I need to take this serious. This person wouldn't be here if I didn't need to do this. I think you guys, if you've made it to this point, it's very simple. You guys need to make sure you either call the number that 833411 scan. You guys need to scan the code or you guys need to go down the link in the description box. Guys, not only is he super smart, wealth of knowledge, but one of the things that I like, he's not a doctor. But all the doctors work for him, his whole family. You said your sons in this business as well, right? All of my sons. Yeah, yeah. It's like, it's like you guys are ultra passionate about this as a family business. But you know, this is one of those things in life where the amount of people's lives you've changed, it just feeds you to be more hungrier to go and keep buying all this expensive technology, allow people at any income bracket to be able to use this to live a long life. And remember, don't just do this for yourself, okay? If you're married, if you've got a girlfriend, I'm telling you, boyfriend, do it for them. If you know someone that's older that you're like, dude, and I'm giving an example, I did this and I'm 44. You know, he just talked about the 32 year old kid, right? And which, I mean, I called that a kid because it's so young, but can probably live to be 70 or 80 now, whereas dad died at 49, grandpa died at 50, just because we're playing chess, we're playing ahead, and you know, it's like predictive analytics, right? Like you talk about data, it's like, you can almost predict what's going to happen. So the goal is physically to go a different road than the one you're currently on, because we can predict where and what's going to happen with what we have. So we just, we choose a different road. And that's how you live a long ass life. So yeah, yeah, I love it. And everything you said is like you said, when's the most important scan, the next one, and the next one, and that can let you know where you live. Like I said, guys, we're in the technology era. So let's not act like we aren't. You guys know what the cell phone is done for you, right? Just imagine what's been done for you medically. And by the way, you don't have to go buy all this stuff. You don't have to go do all this stuff. All you do is you get together with somebody that bought all the stuff. You don't have to call your own doctor. You literally call the number. You guys click the link or you scan on the screen. And then you get connected to a man right here and he'll take care of everything. That's it. It's the power of knowing people. Anybody I know that can help you guys have a better life, make more money, build your skill set, create better habits, or live a longer life and be healthier. Dude, I'm going to I'm going to introduce you guys to him. So I want to tell you, thank you today. Thank you. Truly it's been awesome, man. I love it. Usually I'm all like fired up and wired up today. I'm just sitting back, just getting educated. But hey, I do this myself. What it is that I'm telling you guys you need to do, I did for myself, I do for my wife, and I'm going to continue to do this until I die. And I'm going to I'm going to play ahead of this game. I'm going to I'm going to be ahead of it. So I'm counting on you. I'd rather live to be 290 years old. I'm counting on you. All right, love you guys. I'll see you in the next podcast. And I appreciate you brother. Thank you guys will be seeing a lot of him soon. See you soon. Hey guys, I just want to tell you the true one percenters you made it till the end of the video. Do me a favor, share it with the friend that wants to go to another level. Make sure you like the video comment below so I know who you are, set your notifications and then subscribe to the channel. We got daily sales training videos dropping. I'll see you soon.